Sunday, 24 April 2011

Monday, 18 April 2011

A productive week Three bookshops have agreed to stock the book, have had two interviews with local press and an invitation to talk about the book on Phoenix radio. Thanks to them all for their interest.

Friday, 8 April 2011

Andrew and Jane Russell of the Black Horse, Clifton, have very kindly agreed to let me use their function room for a book launch event on Thursday the 5th May at 7.30. I find myself wondering what the Rayner family would have thought if they'd known that almost two hundred years after Liz's murder, a book would be written about it and launched in the very place the coroner's inquiry took place. I suspect the air will be thick with ghosts...

Saturday, 2 April 2011

It is Tuesday afternoon, New Year’s Day 1833. Samuel Brearley, agedfourteen, is in Clifton Wood with two of his friends, Simeon and JohnRayner, aged sixteen and eleven respectively. John is bragging about therabbit he caught in a snare the previous day and his plans to try and takea deer.‘Not a chance!’ mocks his brother. ‘You couldn’t hit a barn door atten paces, you.’‘Shut your gob,’ says John, cockily. ‘I’m a tons better aim than thee.’Always the peace maker, their friend Sam is anxious to prevent thebrothers ending up in a scrap. ‘Let’s find out then,’ he says.He begins scanning the wood for likely targets. ‘Let’s see who can hit. . .’ His words trail off as he catches sight of something a little way ahead.‘What’s that?’ he asks, pointing to what must surely be a bundle of rags.Simeon, asserting his status as eldest, walks cautiously forward. Hisface drains to a sickening white. He gazes down at the body in itsblood-soaked clothes – clothes he recognises.Transfixed by thehorrific sight he mutters, ‘It’s our Liz.’
* * *
At the inquest four days later, it was to Sam Brearley that the coroner
turned for a description of the murder scene. It may be that Simeon
and John, Elizabeth’s brothers, were too traumatised to speak clearly
of their grim discovery, or perhaps Samuel was a level-headed lad
who could be relied upon to tell the tale plainly and calmly. Certainly
his careful description of the body and its position suggests a boy
of above average intelligence and observation skills. He recalls she
was on her belly, ‘arms crossed and her head was upon her arms’. The
body was facing uphill. He notes the abundance of blood, some of
it ‘a yard above her in the wood’, and ‘some on her back, fair across
her shoulders a great deal’. Other details are that her hair had fallen
loose and her legs were bare, ‘but her gown was not torn at the back
– it was covered in blood’.
Samuel also had the presence of mind to check for footprints,
but ‘the ground was all leaves and I could not tell whether anybody
else had been there. I could not see any footsteps.’ Neither were
there ‘knife, scissors or razor’. His keen eye also noted how ‘her shoe
toes had gone right into the ground’. This, together with the blood
a yard above her, suggests she was dragged further into the wood
from the initial place of execution, presumably so her body would
be less easily seen.
Whatever other thoughts tumbled through Sam’s head, he
wasted no time in alerting the village.

What's it all about?

“Borrowers of the Night: The Clifton Wood Murder,” is now out!But what’s it all about and why has it got a blog? Well, this isn’t just any book - this is a historical, true crime, murder mystery book with dramatic reconstructions. And although I believe I’ve built a pretty strong case for the solution to the crime, you, dear reader, might come to a different conclusion. So, if you think I’ve missed a vital clue, misinterpreted a piece of evidence, or you’ve got an entirely different theory, the blog is where you can post your ideas…